The Oshawa Times, 5 Dec 1959, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY Another way to reduce juvenile delinquency would be to quit coddling hard-boiled eggs. dhe Oshawa Snes pleasant, A CT WEATHER REPORT Cloudy and colder tonight and Sunday; snowflurries expected Sunday, winds southwest, un. Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1959 Authorized es Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa TWENTY-TWO PAGES Vol. 88--No. 283 RCAF DAKOTAS SEARCH 1 VOCABULARIES ' SEEM DEFICIENT TORONTO (CP) -- A depart- ment of education memoran- dum released Friday to sec- ondary schools outlines vocabu- lary deficiencies on the part of this year's Grade 13 examina- tion candidates, The memorandum said many students lost marks because they did not know the meaning of words such as thwart and subsequent. The 3l-page document also included the following ex- amples of boners in composi- tion: "When 50 years old the boy lost his father." "Entering the room his eye was struck by a large picture." "The reason is because it is dark." Also listed were errors diction: in i | along ways and irregardless. he way to Quirinal Pal chi's residence. --AP Wire Photo from Rome % CAR CARRYING President Eisenhower and President Gio- vanni Gronchi rolls past 1ome's ancient Coliseum today on | ace, Gron- | anyways, aanywheres, | 3600 MILES AN HOUR Peace Plan WASHINGTON (AP) -- Sam the space monkey, alive and kicking after a violent rocket ride 55 miles up, was due today at Norfolk, Va. There he'll set his feet on terra firma again for the first time since 11:15 a.m. Friday, when a Little Joe rocket shot him aloft from Wallops Island, Va. This was Sam's dizzying odys- sey from that point: His space capsule, the kind future space men will ride in their first attempts to orbit the| earth, roared to a height of 19 miles. | There an escape rocket ignited, | blasted loose from the main ter rocket and carried the PCs Ride High, Dynamic OTTAWA (CP)--Except for the name and some of the faces, Group About 800 delegates and sup- porters, loyal despite years of Space Monkey Alive And Well For Steel VAL d'Or, Que. (CP) -- Fog and drizzle today blocked the FOR MISSING AIRGRAF Plane With 7 Down In Quebec RCAF Search and Rescue head- quarters at Trenton Friday night Under Way [search for a construction com-sent two Dakota aircraft to this pany plane with seven persons ntining community 210 miles capsule on up to a height of 55 WASHINGTON (AP) -- Govern- aboard that apparently erashed iles. Testing this esca . s : ell pe eh ment mediators promised to offer in rugged northern Quebec bush | country. future astronauts--was the main some steel settlement proposals) purpose of Sam's journey. 1It'today at the first face-to-face |, Last Word from We tHincugine worked perfectly. ; ne] raft Su wi meeting of industry and unionivecs call about 7:05 p.m. Friday. 3,600-m.p.h. RIDE . [negotiators held since Tuesday.|It had fuel then for about another For a few seconds the seven-| Director Joseph F. Finnegan of [two hours flying. pound monkey, in his foam- ihe federal Mediation and Co: Lamont Construction Company cushioned cradle, was travelling eiliation Service said in advance|®f nearby Rouyn, owners of the at 3,600 miles an hour. The pres-| "welll have some suggestions » aircraft, declined to identify the sure and strain was enormousiHe did not spell them out, but|fiVe - Passengers and .two crew compared to sea-level conditions. said his team of mediators has|members aboard the plane until Then Sam tumbled earthward been broaching peace plans to|they received definite word of in the capsule. At 20,000 feet a both sides. its fate. small parachuie blossomed #04 Finnogan explained that separ-| TRENTON (CP) -- An RCAF Sie ee 8 hut Hh jate talks he has presided over Dakota aircraft left here for Val go, Lae man Farae he id di daily since last Tuesday with the d'Or, Que., early today bringing Joumed an wing lor east industry and then the Steelwork-(to three the number of Dakotas of Walions, Tala. It Dad taken| rs Unien have been exploratory mobilized by the RCAF to search just 13 OD ie from takeoff. ~ |2nd "routine mediation." for a construction company plane A radio be nd a dye| He bad been trying to reconcile| missing north of Val d'Or with radio beacon and a dVelconflicting cost estimates with|/seven aboard. marker guided a navy destroyer «ine glide.rule boys"--or techni- to the spot where the capsule|nians on such matters as insur-|unit here said the Dakota. was bobbed and tossed in eight-foot anne and pensions, | waves. The capsule was hauled : aboard in about two hours. There seemed But Sam still was imprisoned, and the destroyer crew was re- {luctant to let him out for fear of |da | delicate instr t to be . little|cause of poor weather conditions Thursday night by President Eis-| enhower, the weather there. The RCAF Search and Rescue {unable to land at Val d'Or be- ground to be optimistic for a|(blowing snow) and 'proceeded prompt settlement as called for|directly to the search area, about 57 miles north, to take a look at northwest of Montreal. | One squeezed in under a stead- ily-lowering cloud ceiling. But the |other--after a brief flight over {the area where the plane is be- |lieved to have crashed--had to {land at North Bay. "It's rough country up there," one search pilot said. "Our one plane that got over it tonight had to get out. The visi- bility was. too bad. We hope to get a better look at things later today." Early today the cloud ceiling was hovering 300-400 feet above Val d'Or airport. Visibility was ghost ¥ of a mile in drizzle and 0g. The forecast called for the drizzle to change fo freezing rain and snowflurries as the temper. ature--around the 35-degree mark --moved slightly lower. More aircraft were to join the search as soon as weather per mitted. The missing plane left here about 2 p.m. Friday on a flight to Lake Opinichl arth of here takes 3% hours. | PLEDGE IN ROME Ike Tells Italians uild Better World' Italian government leaders today fore breaking off for lunch at a 450-year-old villa. : Eisenhower settled down with sses of orange juice and min- eral water at his conference with Premier Antonio Segni, Foreign Minister Giuseppe Pella and other top Italian officials. He came to the meeting after swift trips to Italy's tomb of the un- known soldier and the United| States embassy. CPR. CNR Propose Subsidies OTTAWA (CP)--A government subsidy paid to the railways on behalf of prairie farmers is pro- posed by the CPR and CNR as 2 solution to the problem of low Segni at the villa Madd After the morning monference, the president went to Junch with e- there was little similarity be- tween the Progressive Conserva- tive organization that gathered here this week and the one that met in January, 1956. This latest meeting of the party's national association was riding high, In office with a rec- ord Commons majority, it found virtually nothipg to criticize on the national stene. Most of resolutions commended what the government has done or plans to do. started his talks with Segni and |do. other Italian leaders. | At its last national get-together signed by Raphael. President Giovanni Gronchi was one of the luncheon guests. COMMUNIQUE EXPHICTED He scheduled another meeting with Gronchi later in the after- noon to carry on talks started Friday night. A convmunique on the talks was expectexd tonight. | This morning Eisemhower de-| clared that his objective in his global goodwill tour is to help create a better warld for his grandchildren than lie knew him- self. He made this pledge before going .into the talks with Segni and the other goveynment lead- ers. them that the United States in- tends to press ahead with a policy of building. Europe's de- fences against communism. Standing before about 900 Italian and Ameritan employees of the U.S. Embassy here, Eisen- hower made a solemn pledge to "try to interprel. America to other people a little bit more em- statutory freight rates on export grain shipments. The two major railways Fri- day launched their case for gov- ernment help before a royal commission on transportation set| up six months ago to look into| transport inequities across Can- | ada. | Without specifying the,cost, the| phatically, a little bit more ac- curately than has een done." PLACES WREATH The president went to the em- bassy directly from placing a wreath at the tomb of Italy's Un- known Soldier. This was the first of a round of activities on his second rain- |taing it in stride. He is reported ready to assure railways asked the government E d to exude|early in 1956, the Conservative confidence that he would achieve association had little to cheer the goal he has set for himslf about. After more than 20 years on this 22,000-mile tour of three in opposition, the party had only continnts. about 50 of the Commons' 265 adversity, attended that meeting|Sam had a 40-hour supply of nearly four years ago. | oxygen. This week more than double| that number jammed the conven-| SEAS THWART PLAN its| HOLD FIVE PROVINCES tion hotel. Speaker after speaker praised Prime Minister Diefen- baker as the man who did the most to bring about the trans- formation in their fortunes. Back in 1956 there were vice b; hog 4 vd For a time the destroyer tried to transfer the one-ton capsule to a nearby navy landing ship which had a veterinarian aboard. But the seas were running foo high. Finally, with the vet giving ad- y radio and with further from Wallops Island, two Conservative g Canada -- in Ontario and New Brunswick. Since then the party has captured three other provin- cial governments -- Nova Scotia, Matis and Prince Edward Is- and. Despite their success--or per- haps b of it -- party offi- The first two days of his tour seats. The main tion of have been demanding, but Eisen- that convention was in drafting hower, although he seemed a bit|a series of resolutions blasting tired at times, appeared io be the Liberal government on a {score of fronts. cials were a little worried this week. Their concern was over rank-and-file complacency. y There was almost no debate from the convention floor. Reso- lutions and reports, drafted by LATE NEWS FLASHES committees, were accepted with- out argument. The whoop-la gen- erally associated with such meet- ings was confined to special br | Christmas Fast For Catholics Changed VATICAN CITY (AP)--The Pope has authorized that the observance of The Christmas fast day be changed hereafter to Dec. 23 from Dec. 24. Vatican sources said Friday the Pope made the change because many Roman Catholics have found the fast difficult to observe Dec. 24 because on that day many are travelling to join their families for Christmas. Hawaii Volcano Erupts Again HONOLULU (AP)--Kilauea volcano hurled toms of mol ten lava and red-hot boulders 200 feet high out of a roaring crater today. The latest blowup, which began before dawn Friday, was accompanied by earth tremors as far as three miles from fire-spouting Kilauea Iki crater on Hawaii Is- land, some 200 miles southeast of Honolulu. The eruption is the fourth since Nov. 14, Magog Strike Situation Eases MAGOG, Que. (CP)--The strike atmosphere in this tex- tile town of 13,000 appeared to have eased today as a result of moves by both sides. These developments came Friday whipped day in the Eternal City. to compensate them for losses in| | From the embassy the presi- handling western export grain, [dent went to Qmirinal Palace and after Jacques Casgrain, provincial assistant deputy minister of labor, made contact with union and company leaders. They insisted the aid be called a subsidy to prairie farmers. Chrysler To Start Employee Recall WINDSOR, Ont. (CP) -- Chrys- fer Corporation of Canada an-| nounced Friday it will start Mon- day to recall 785 truck and en-| gine plant employees laid off last week because of a shortage of | parts. The parts shortage, attributed to the steel shortage, caused lay- offs of 1,800 other hourly rated employees scheduled to return to work Dec. 14. | | | | | | | CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 WE [NO POPULAR BACKING § |airlift gets into full flight. and din- ners. the destroyer officers removed the monkey from the capsule, This .was six hours after the launching. "Alive and kicking," came the word from the National Aero- nautics and Space Administra- tion, which conducted the ex- periment. Sam spent the night in the de- stroyer's sick bay, as it steamed toward Norfolk. For supper he got half an apple, half an orange and a cup of water. He ate and drank eagerly. From Norfolk, Sam will be flown to the School of Aviation Medicine at Brooks air force |base, Texas. {from the school's initials. He was iborn there 30 months ago. His name comes| RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) -- President Juscelino Kubitschek has snuffed out the second revolt against his regime, About 23 rebel Brazilian air force and army officers have been scattered since seizing five planes early Thursday. At least two officers fled to Argentina in a hijacked airliner and were given Asylum. Several others were captured and the rest headed deep into the jungles of northwest Brazil. "] consider the incident closed," Kubitschek said Friday night, declaring that 'events like these never will be repeated in our country." The midget revolt aroused no popular support, and even anti- Yuletide Airlift From Trenton Base TRENTON (CP)--It's Christ- mas already in the Royal Cana- dian Air Force as the Yuletide RCAF Air Transport Command | will deliver presents and mail| soon to Canadians serving in the United Nations Emergency Force in Egypt, to North Atldntic Treaty Organization bases in Eu- rope and tothe re-supply base in Britain. The RCAF has already deliv- Brazil Revolt Snuffed Out government politicians and news- papers rallied around Kubit- schek. Several of the ringleaders were involved in a similar abor- tive revolt in 1956 which was crushed in 18 days. Kubitschek showed leniency and granted pardons to the officers then. In the latest propaganda pro- test, the officers charged the Kubitschek government with being corrupt and Communist- tainted. They flew the stolen planes to the small jungle town of Aragarcas, 1,100 miles north- west of Rio, and sought to rally support. Government paratroops took over the town and its airstrip early Friday, shortly after the rebels pulled out. One of the rebel leaders, air force Maj. Heber Teixera Pinto, fled to Buenos Aires in the, air- liner commandeered Wednesday while on a regular passenger run from Rio to Belem, Brazil. SENATOR HELD With him was an accomplice, Charles Herba, a civilian me- chanic; and a Brazilian senator, Remy Archer, whom they had seized as a hostage. Kubitschek said his govern- ment will try to extradite the "air pirates" from Argentina. mire. would see wooden beds and cribs|vestigation floating out to sea. 1 VILLAGERS POKE around in debris of over 30 boats which were smashed to bits by torna- Soggy Mud. Blankets Town Site FREJUS, France (CP) -- The aircraft banked slowly over this devastated town so that passen- do that struck the French Riv- iera Tuesday. Photo was taken after a dam-break flooded the Flood Disaster Inquiry Starts FREJUS, France (Reuters) -- fins, most bearing only Scores more dead were recovered names of the vietims a today and new communal graves hastily' in chalk or paint, were [gers could glimpse the scene of France's worst flood disaster. From the air, in fortunate de- tachment, you could see the] crumbled Malpasset Dam and the valleys that led the cascading waters down toward the tidy re-| sort town on the French Riviera. | The path of the raging flow was| marked with soggy, glistening] red, mud, fanning out through the| town into a gigantic red puddle! in the Mediterranean. You could see railway lines| corkscrewing through the mud like over-stretched coil springs. | The metal of automobiles shone from the water. Overturned] houses looked like toys in the| With field glasses you The scenes in Frejus were sick- ening. The insurgents had been sup- porters of Janio Quadros, 42, aland former governor of Sac Paulo|within the splattered town, but it| Some Only police, reporters rescue workers were allowed were opened to claim them as an{lowered into three communal urgent government inquiry be-|graves while 3,000 mourners gan into the flood disaster that{watched. Trucks rumbled in bear laid waste this Riviera town. ing more bodies as the funeral The second mass burial in two Went on. days was due later today. The victims Friday included It followed an official announce- {one entire large family--A father, ment that 257 bodies have been mother and nine children. recovered so far from the mud| Of the bodies recovered so far, and wrecked buildings of this'more than 50 were children, once-pretty town. Mass burials will continue as Semi-official estimates said the victims are identified. more than 200 persons were stiil| missing. It was predicted Friday WHY? : night that the 'death toll would{ The cabinet ministers are hers be about 500. Many of the dead|te find an answer to the quesiion: may never be found, as their, Why did the huge Malpasset bodies have been swept out to|Pam disintegrate under its first sea. |real test Wednesday night? | of the 'Wednesday [night disaster, as five French |cabinet ministers began an in- |quiry. [HUNT FOR VICTIMS 10,000 soldiers, sailors Police launched a criminal in-| and a candidate in next year's|was still overcrowded. And after and police in rescue squads re- The burst dam loosed a 100- mile-an-hour tidal wave on this village that swept homes and bodies far out to sea, ripped buildings apart and covered the town with acres of mud. The reinforced concrete dam had been inaugurated just 10 days before the disaster. A great lake BANSHEE JET FIGHTER FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 A Banshie all-weather jet | off the coast of Nova Scotia. | Banshee is fitted, can be seen lered gifts and mail at Saigon, presidential" election. The rebels|the first 24 hours, the outsiders/turned at dawn to hunt for more |Indo-china, for personnel of the | | esc ! 1 built up behing it, and some offi said in a manifesto that a revolt hecame as horror-stricken as the|victims from the collapse of the HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 fighter of the Royal Canadian Navy flies over Jeddore Island The sidewinder, air-to-air guid- ed missiles, with which the under each wing. --National Defence Photo Canadian delegation to the inter- national supervisory er was their only chance for a gov-|heart-broken natives. Every face Malpasset Dam. tal el seemed starchy and numb. cials were said to have been wor- Friday 135 simple wooden cof- ried that the pressure might be too great. - $30,000 COMMUNITY $50,000 $70,000 $90,000 $110,000 $130,000 $150,000 $175,000 CHEST SCOREBOARD |

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